ABSTRACT

This edited volume places the body at the centre of critical thinking about war and its consequences.

War is fundamentally embodied. The reality of war is not just politics by any other means but politics incarnate, politics written on and experienced through the thinking, feeling bodies of men and women. From steeled combatants to abject victims, war occupies innumerable bodies in a multitude of ways, profoundly shaping lives and ways of being human.

Giving the body an analytic recognition that it warrants and has often been denied in conventional war studies, this book brings together new interdisciplinary scholarship that explores the numerous affective, sensory and embodied practices through which war lives and breeds. It focuses on how war is prepared, enacted and reproduced through embodied action, suffering and memory. As such, the book promotes new directions in theorising war and transformations in warfare, via an explicit focus on the body.

This book will be of much interest to students and scholars of war studies, security studies, sociology, anthropology, military studies, politics and IR in general.

chapter |31 pages

War and the body

part |57 pages

Militarising bodies

chapter |16 pages

Preparing and resisting the war body

Training in the British Army

chapter |16 pages

Too fat to fight?

Obesity, bio-politics and the militarisation of children's bodies

chapter |12 pages

Military chic

Fashioning civilian bodies for war

part |74 pages

Embodying war

chapter |13 pages

On patrol

The embodied phenomenology of infantry

chapter |22 pages

‘Switching on' for cash

The Private Militarised Security contractor as geo-corporeal actor 1

chapter |10 pages

Affect, agency, and responsibility

The act of killing in the age of cyborgs 1

part |65 pages

Corporeal aftermaths

chapter |14 pages

“An unbroken man despite losing an arm”

Corporeal reconstruction and embodied difference – prosthetics in Western Germany after the Second World War (c. 1945–1960)

chapter |13 pages

War-wounds

Disability, memory and narratives of war in a Lebanese disability rehabilitation hospital 1

chapter |16 pages

Memorialising the veteran body

New Zealand nuclear test veterans and the search for military citizenship

chapter |15 pages

The war dead and the body politic

Rendering the dead soldier's body in the new global (dis)order

part |14 pages

Conclusion